Newspapers / The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, … / Oct. 16, 1924, edition 1 / Page 7
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ION IS MEDICAL COAL jth Is Purchasable Is ling the Motto of [overnments. TOWNSEND, M.D. been during recent years JSS ive change in the atti community as a whole to : of preventive medicine. , ta tes, cities and towns n V instances, given con mions Os their abiding old adage that preven . than the cure, by appro ee sums of money for f public health. The State two per cent of its total sos New York State of' Health is: “Public rchasable; within natural n y community can de- B ‘ death * rate.’’ And s being literally applied lC es. Our owti state . re, preventive medicine nore than decrease death takes better citizens, it 3 sum total ot earnings, all forms of progress, it iy adds to human happi i every way makes life e more worth the living. Economic Loss, irolina today is losing •housands of years of thousands of years of 2 because of sickness e prevented. North Caro ay thousands of her peo -3t go through life wholly handicapped because' of ie results of illness that oeen prevented, ling power of North Caro that is lost each year by disease could be conserv the other expenses inci illness culd be saved, and :h diverted to public roads v Commission might soon lously surfacing all roads ] using inlays of gold for ! ost certainly the State j no further need for bonds i it to millions. y cleanliness control of tliseases, arrangements ?rvision of milk and wa with adequate provision iicers and a public health ice is paid for by taxa- j ne has arrived, however, ; inch larger measure, phy feneral practice must be al factors in the public am. There is need for the ration of the family physi nstrators, sanitary engin health nurses and others, personnel for the work of l the work for which the t whether nation, state, city pays. The care don of the general health Is in the community is the nd duty of the family doc ever ill, in fact no one can, ace in that intimate soul tionship with the individ of the Physician, of the physician who is the practice of preven -1 as curative, medicine is and deal with patients his charge that they will, earliest years enjoy the dgorous bodily and mental day life precept must oied or followed by prac o often no permanent ad :crue. With this in view ally scrutinize our present ascertain in what way they edified to more certainly ‘oal for which we strive the “best society.” even r ganized and advanced the majority of the peo ressed with the necessity > medical or hygienic at when they have been h disease, only after they ’ down right sick. The lat “he finally got so sick a d to send for the doctor” r d, and still accepted as nethod of procedure. Per tion of the subconscious good old family doctors” ,nd are prone to consider lent may be responsi e^ cra ble attitude of the ‘ ' ne Profession and the ave em blazoned in their Ever y fire was once a * rna of Sickness. tirriQ arrives when every >mmu nity will feel that an | ? to one who has e disease, then will the -'entive medicine have hen emphasized the im „early attention to the ur ging that' your or eas t advised ,! b -n the bud” an«Jm-j ! pending disaster, let us make two < suggestions—one to the people and one 1 to the profession: ( To the public we would say it is j much better to pay your doctor lib- \ erally for preventing an illness than ■ to pay the same amount for a long } continued treatment of an advanced illness that has cost so much in suf fering and lost time. Even those few 1 words of advice he gave by telephone s may have saved you many dollars, i Now come across and pay him vtell. s To the profession we would say,, j it’s an awful accusation when the 1 people say “yes, Dr. Blank is mighty • good when you’re bad off sick but j he won’t do much for little things.” The fire department of your town ( is worth exactly what it saves and ] not what it lets bum up. NORTH CAROLINA BRIEFS. . |l Short Items of State News That J Will Interest Busy Reader. i Labor conditions in the State contin- 1 ue to be good. 1 . ’ 1 Senator Simmons is out for the adop- ' tion of the Port bill. .Fred McKethan, of Hamlet, 21 years old, committed suicide by shooting himself Friday. Last Saturday the Melarchton Luth eran church near Liberty celebrated its 100th birthday. j i While knocking apples from a tree ! near Rocky Mount Willie Mears, 19, ! was accidentally shot by his own gun and killed. “Death Row” in the State peniten tiary has ten men waiting to be elctro cuted. Seven have appeals before the Supreme Court and three have been ; given respites by thegovernor. Judge J. Lloyd Horton has instruc ed the solicitor to indict the Wake County Commissioners for diregard ing the grand jury in not isolating prisoners with infectious diseases: Mrs. Elizabeth Briggs, of Rocky , Mount, was tried in Lexington Friday for striking a young boy with her ' car and killing him. She was put un der a SSOOO bond for her appearance at court. Sherwood Ellington, agent for Atlan tic & Western railroad at Jonesboro, was chloroformed and robbed of SIOO and his watch by two men he was j trying to do a favor. The men made their escape. Two Chapel Hill youths, John Pen dergraft and Tom Sparrow, came near losing their lives Thursday when they ! tried to save the life of a dog. They | w T ere both seriously hurt when their car turned over. The dog was killed. Apex held its big fair last Friday and Saturday and was a great suc cess. Fine exhibits, horse races and big crowds. The school children parad- » led and Boy Scouts played a big fac tor. The fair was opened by an ad dress from Carroll W. Weathers, of . Raleigh. Doors and window sash are being j bought for the new Presbyterian 1 church that is being constructed at j Goldston. The Presbyterian congrega ition at that place expect to be wor shipping in their new church soon. | The Baptists of Goldston are also building a new church. Thomas H. Dunn, who has been rep i resenting himself as a Ku Klux organ izer in Wake County, and charged with embezzlement of the funds of the order, was It off from further prose I SPECIALS For Chatham Folks f Now that the fall season has arrived and you need to j: | purchase your winter supplies, we have made special pnc- < i es on our goods for Chatham buyers. Everything in our ;; I store absolutely new, having been purchased during the ;; past few weeks and many of them are being sold today | I at less than wholesale cost. We can suply your family with guaranteed shoes cheap- j: er than any merchant or catalogue house in the whole ;; country. Call and see us and be convinced. Special atten- j; tion to Chatham customers. _ S. BERMAN, |! Chapel Hill, N. C. jj |j j-j-J## ■Fig’#'trfo********* l> ******** l **** l ***ffff i J cution and was told by Judge Horton to go back to his home in Robeson county and go to work on the farm and also to appear before two Sep tember terms of Wake County Court and show that he had bfeen of good behavior. San Diego, Cal. Oct., 10.-—Dr. J. W. Peacock, for whom extradition was sought by North Carolina, authorities as a result of his secape from the in sane ward of the North Carolina pen itentiary at the state capital, where he had been confined for the shooting and killing of Chief of Police Taylor at Thomasville, N. C., was freed on a Writ of habeas corpus in Superior court today. He returned at once to his ranch near here. Southport, Oct., 12.—1 n the quiet and calm, of a beautiful Sabbath af ternoon, C. W. Stewart and his son, Elmer, today heard the solemn words of Judge Henry A. Grady that sentenced them to die in the electric chair on November 28 for the fnurder on July 29 last of De tective Sergeant Leon George and Deputy United States Marshall Sam Lilly. An appeal was taken and the two men were taken to the penitenti ary at Raleigh. STATEMENT OF THE CHATHAM RECORD O. J. Peterson, owner and publisher. Farmers Bank, of Pittsboro and Colin G. Shaw Mortgagees, (Signed) O. J. PETERSON, Subscribed and sw T orn to before me this 7th day of October 1924. * G. R. PILKINGTON, N. P. —»SU OHKS*— The Armour Fertilizer Works at Navassa, near Wilmington, suffered a loss of SIOO,OOO by fire last week. I! Cotton Ginning | We expect to be ready after Sept. 15 to gin your cot- Jl| ton. m Our prices are as follows: With new bagging and ties $4.50 isl Ginnery with second bagging and ties complete__s4.oo JP We are beter prepared than ever before to give real |§ service. We have thoroughly overhauled our ginnery and |{|i have every convenience for your accommodation. HIGHEST MARKET PRICE FOR CTTEN SEED. || Chatham Oil and Fertilizer Co., || PITTSBORO, NORTH CAROLINA || COMPLETE IN ITSELF Sharpens the blade in the razor without removing it. Quick. Convenient. Easy to clean. Complete sets — razor, with strop and extra Hades, SI.OO and up. i Valet/luto-Strop Razor RUNNING WATER POSSIBLE. FOR EVERY FARM HOME. Raleigh, Oct. I.—Running water is within the reach of every farm home |in North Carolina. j E. R Raney, farm engineering spec ialist for the State College Extension Service, has presided at the installa tion of many simple water systems during the past year and his studies show that no home, however humble it may be, need do without this nec essary convenience. These farm water systems may be only a pitcher pump located conveniently over the sink or they may be the elaborate kind with complete kitchen and bathroom fix tures. Mr. Raney states that the water may be secured from wells, both deep and shallow, or springs and cisterns. The source of water supply will de-} termine the type of pump needed and j then the only thing left for the own er to determine is the kind of storage tank he would like to have and the extent to which he will go with the installation of fixtures If a spring lower than the house is furnishing as much as three gallons of water per minute and a fall of at least three feet can be obtained with in a reasonable distance of the spring, a hydraulic ram may be installed to 1 pump water into a tank . Whatever the source of supply, it is best to put in a storage tank suf- ficiently large to hold at least one or two days’ supply of water, in figur ing the size of the tank, Mr. Raney advises that 30 gallons per day for each person in the home be used as a basis. ■iaa 9 C 3» ; Two white men, who escaped from [ the HEfflTax farm some time ago, have been returned. I Egr* SEE YOUR LABEL I Protect Hard Earned _ i Money-Buy Guaranteed if Investment Safety ||j * || Wage earners who art taking money from the bank to |u| make their first investment, and salaried men and women W. with dependents should seek "the protection of ail iron (rj| clad guarantee against loss. A Every year thousands of people lose the the accumula tion of years of thrift in unguaranteed securities. Much tut! of this money islost in industrial corporation stocks of M AAA which 90% never pay dividends, according to reliable fig- AAA Mj Wr ures. Oil and mining stock fakers take a tremenduous toll. In addition upwards of $500,000,000 is estimated (mi be lost every year in fraudelent securities. jgj Our Guaranteed 6 percent Real Estate Bonds are one of jm| the few investments on the market today which bear a . M written and unqualified guarantee of payment of princi- W ' pafl and interest, t 9|| -They are secured by land and buildings worth consider- |i| ably more than the mortgage, and in addition have be hind them our Guarantee of $500,800,00 which would g have to be completely wiped out before you could lose fl a penny. * ».We have these Guaranteed 6 percent First Mortgage jjl Real Estate Bonds for sale in denominations of SIOO and ; g ——— m —— I Central Loan and Trust Company, § CAPITAL AND SURPLUS, $500,000.00 1 W. W. BROWN, - Secretary and Treasurer, || , BURLINGTON, N. C. 1 ► ◄ j Our Roofing j ► Keeps the Water Out | t - 3 ► AND KEEPS ON KEEPING IT OUT FOR YEARS AND J t * YEARS AND YEARS. 3 ► ◄ i ': ► ◄ t 5-V CRIMP GALVANIZED ROOFING for bams, sheds 3 t and pack houses 3 f GALVANIZED SHINGLES, painted tin shingles, As- J f phalt and Asbestos shingles and slate for residences. 3 ► ROLL ROOFING (slate surfaced or smooth) for gen- < ; ► eral use. " < \ i RICHARDSON SUPER-GIANT SHINGLES FOR 3 ► HOMES, CHURCHES AND SCHOOLS. 3 ► ◄ £ Gutters, Downspouts, Ridge Roll, Valley Tin, Sheet Iron, 3 £ Sheet Copper, Zinc, Tobacco Flues, Etc. 3 E I ► IF YOU CAN’T FIND IT IN YOUR HOME STORES, J ► TRY DURHAM. 3 \ Budd-Piper Roofing Co. j l WALTER P. BUDD, Sec’y - - - DURHAM, N. C. 3 , £ ■' l ' ■■■' » ' ■ ■ '■■■■■■■■■■ « t “IT PAYS TO TRADE IN DURHAM” 3 L ◄ ► < iaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa 1 I Your Money Here | Means Safety Plus I A DOLLAR UNDER LOCK AND KEY is worth two in if your pocket. Not true, you'll say, but consider a moment Ira and you’ll agree with us. The guarded dollar-means no fear of loss by theft, spendthrift or speculation. HI You’ll think twice before you remove the guard, be- M cause he's your dollar’s best friend. |M Here we extend the utmost vigilance to keep your dol- |kl lar’s intact. \ 8. FOR YOUR CON-MuffI|HIGHLY PROTECTED || VENIENCE BOXES. 1 The Chatham Bank | J. C. GREGSON, President. J. J. JENKINS, Cashier. || W. A. Teague, vice President. Imj SILER CITY, NORTH CAROLINA, g
The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 16, 1924, edition 1
7
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